Thursday, December 11, 2014

Don't Give Me A Teddy Bear

http://www.giantteddy.com/60in-pink-gigi-chubs-cancer-awareness-teddy-bear/
“Barbara! What are you even saying? Why should you just wallow in your sadness? What is wrong with trying to lead a happy and peaceful life in the face of cancer?”

I was so angry. It seems to me that optimism—trying to overcome the imminent evils of life—is precisely what defines our humanity. All of us have struggles, and we all must strive to find peace.

Immediately she exposed my ignorance: “Well, Hannah, have you ever had cancer? Do you know what it’s like to suffer chemotherapy?”

Of course I had to say no. I’ve never had cancer. But…

“Barb, don’t assume that I haven’t had my own struggles. Life is hard for everyone!”

I probably shouldn’t have been so surprised at how furious she became after that. But I was. And her anger was terrifying.

She grabbed a teddy bear from off the bed and shook it at me as she said: “Oh? You think that cancer is ‘hard’? You know what it’s like for your very own cells—the biological essence of your being—to attack your body? You know what it’s like to have people think that giving you a teddy bear with a pink ribbon on it will make up for the cellular warfare happening inside your own body? Yes, please elaborate on how your experience is anything like mine.”

I was speechless. And the worst part was, she was right.

http://www.express.co.uk/life-style/life/
528509/Disney-Princess-breast-cancer-survivors
“But Hannah, do you know what the worst part is—worse than the dying—worse than the pain—worse than the fear? Losing your identity. Yes, your cells are literally attacking your identity, but so are the doctors and so are your friends—so is the rhetoric used by the entire cancer community! The way we talk about cancer undermines identity—the autonomy—the humanity—of the patient.”

I was not following: “Are you saying that the doctors and your friends and the greater cancer community have stolen your humanity?”

“Yes! Just hear me out. When I got diagnosed with cancer, the doctor said to me, ‘Unfortunately, there is a cancer.’ He did not say ‘Barb, I’m sorry, but you have cancer.’ He took me out of the equation. I was no longer a person, but a cancer-carrierWhen we talk about cancer, we never talk about the victim. We never use nouns to describe the condition. Having cancer is a verb. Having cancer is being cancer. Having cancer is battling cancer—and you are only free from this identity as a verb rather than a noun when you are a survivor of cancer. In essence, I’m only a fully-fledged person when I’m cancer-free.”

What if she was right?

“We are treated like children. It’s our job to let the doctors—the grown ups—take care of us. We’re not allowed to question whether or not having chemo, which may or may not save us and will make us suffer either way, is what’s best for us. So they give us teddy bears and crayons; they tell us to just keep smiling.”

http://www.keepcalm-o-matic.co.uk/
p/beat-cancer-and-keep-smiling/
“Well, Barb, I’m sure your friends and doctors are just trying to help. Having a positive attitude can make a world of difference.”

 “But we should be allowed to complain because feeling those feelings is forbidden. Complaining is giving up—as if keeping a smile on my face will defeat the evil inside me—as if the outcome of my body’s struggle against cancer is something I can control! It’s time we stop blaming the victims!”

She was right, and I knew it.

“You know what I really wish? I wish my feelings were treated like they were valid. I wish I could just say ‘Cancer sucks!’ I wish I had someone who would stop trying to feed me that crap about how a smile can save you.”

I took the teddy bear from her hand and hurled it across the room. Then I just screamed: “Cancer sucks!”




Sunday, November 30, 2014

How to Be a Good Little Christian


Be like Jesus
http://www.reddit.com/domain/27.media.tumblr.com/

1.) Ostracize the heathen!


In a world filled with all of them there Jews and Muslims and Atheists, where does morality exist? Obviously people who are not Christians have no sense of morality or social justice. Therefore it is our duty, as good little Christians, to tell those sinners to repent from their evil ways. Dontcha think a bumper sticker'll do the trick? By telling them the long list (and boy is it a long list) of things that they're doing wrong, they'll come 'a'repentin for certain.

https://fideetliteris.wordpress.com/2012/10/02/coexistence-and-the-truth-solution/

2. Pray the gay away.

If you aren't speaking out against those gays, then you aren't doing the work of the Lord. I know what you're thinking: "but Jesus said that the most important commandment is love." Well, what He really wanted us to be payin attention to was those confusing, easily-misconstrued, little verses that He buried in the Bible to prove that homosexuality is a sin--punishable by eternal damnation. Those verses might be few and far between, but we here Christians know the true truth.



3. Remember: Jesus said "Give a man a fish and he'll eat for a day; teach a man to fish and he'll eat for a lifetime."


Or wait... that was a Chinese proverb. But either way, never mind all that crap about helping the poor. Jesus doesn't believe in giving handouts (which is why he fed 5,000 people on credit and then got rich on the interest). If you're down and out in the land of the our Savior--the land of the free and the home of the brave--don't expect any help from us in the Religious Right; Jesus is on our side. 
http://www.addictinginfo.org/2013/06/16/republican-jesus/

4. Being Pro-Life, Pro-Death Penalty, and Pro-War is the Christian way. 

Remember that if the Blessed Virgin Mary would have had an abortion, since she was an unwed teenager who would have had a good shot at being on Sixteen and Pregnant, Jesus never would have been born. And if Pontius Pilate and the Jews wouldn't have supported the Death Penalty, Jesus never would have saved us from our sins. Furthermore, Jesus stands for peace, and WAR IS PEACE.

http://www.quickmeme.com/meme/3qvym2

5. Believe in good, wholesome family values.

That's right wives: you'd better keep to the kitchen. And men, you'd best be bringin home the bacon so that you can afford that 4-bedroom suburban home complete with a swing set and a white picket fence. That there is the way God intended it. The American Dream is God's dream.

http://www.atheistmemebase.com/tag/family-values/

6. Don't you dare support unemployment benefits or raising the minimum wage for those lazy, unskilled workers. 


Poor people are innately lazy, which is why they can't get jobs. They're also hyper-fertile--they breed like rabbits. They exist purely to irritate us hardworking citizens and steal our hard-earned tax dollars for unemployment benefits and welfare programs. If there was one thing that Jesus never would have supported, it's helping out people who don't deserve it. 

http://visit50.com/cartoons-to-make-you-laugh-think-or-inspire-you/cartoon-republican-jesus/
7. Know that America is God's Chosen Land

This land was built on good Christian values. Our Founding Fathers believed in God (they were deists--which is obviously the same thing as Christians). Therefore, our laws are based on them good Christian values. Our leaders are predominantly Christian too. This here is a Christian nation. Our pledge says "One nation, Under God" for a reason! Never mind all that there baloney about the separation of church and state--as long as Christianity is the dominant religion of the this nation. 

https://www.pinterest.com/ewbg/one-nation-under-god/

Thursday, November 20, 2014

I'm Cool. I Died For You, Bro


https://twitter.com/jesus
You know what we really should be talking about? Jesus Christ’s Twitter profile picture. The fact that Jesus Christ—the temporal, human manifestation of eternal, esoteric truth—even has a Twitter page—the forum for #firstworldprobs—blows my mind, but the fact that that is his profile picture seals the deal.


This unique conception of Jesus argues that the Jesus is just one of your peeps, or maybe he’s your dad who thinks he’s funny. Either way, he’s just a regular guy who uses Pantene shampoo and Colgate Advanced Whitening toothpaste. And who doesn’t love a guy with luscious locks and minty-fresh breath? Or a guy who looks like Johnny Depp? His boyish smile and his thumbs up with a wink appeal to the reader’s pathos. Jesus is your friend—not your teacher.


It’s difficult to imagine that this Jesus walked the streets of Nazareth with his 12 favorite students or that he taught at the local synagogue. Instead, he seems to be pointing to his buddies saying, “Yeah, I’m cool. I died for you, bro,” appealing the ethos of his audience. “He’s one of us,” say the teenaged Twitter users, “Yeah man, I’m picking up what you’re throwing down.” But do I, as a Christian, want a Jesus who acts like a teenaged boy? If I need that kind of person in my life, my cup overfloweth.

This depiction of Jesus troubles me. Why should we depict God in our own image? Shouldn’t Christians instead strive to replicate his? The essence of Jesus is love and compassion. Is that what this depiction argues? Maybe. I guess your pal Jesus might be a bro and spot you a couple bucks to buy soda at the movies, but this Jesus doesn't look like he came to "proclaim good news to the poor" and "set the oppressed free." By portraying Jesus as just one of the guys, we trivialize his authority--we make him more palatable for our shallow society. By using this commercialized, watered-down version of Jesus, we make Jesus stand for our temporal society when Jesus actually stands for transcendence, compassion, love, and peace.

zBut really, can anyone produce an accurate portrayal of something as out of this world as Jesus Christ? 

http://www.amazon.com/Trimmery-Animals-Manger-Christian-Christmas/dp/B00GT2PMYW 
             

            

       




Honestly, none of these pictures are doing it for me. On the contrary, I find some of them a bit creepy. Each depiction of Jesus argues something different about who he is, but none offer a complete picture. So do I think that it's wrong to draw or paint or portray Jesus? No, but I think that we should be cognizant of the arguments different depictions make about the nature of Jesus.